---
title: SEP Guidelines
description: Specification Enhancement Proposal (SEP) guidelines for proposing changes to the Model Context Protocol
---

## What is a SEP?

SEP stands for Specification Enhancement Proposal. A SEP is a design document providing information to the MCP community, or describing a new feature for the Model Context Protocol or its processes or environment. The SEP should provide a concise technical specification of the feature and a rationale for the feature.

We intend SEPs to be the primary mechanisms for proposing major new features, for collecting community input on an issue, and for documenting the design decisions that have gone into MCP. The SEP author is responsible for building consensus within the community and documenting dissenting opinions.

Because the SEPs are maintained as text files in a versioned repository (GitHub Issues), their revision history is the historical record of the feature proposal.

## What qualifies a SEP?

The goal is to reserve the SEP process for changes that are substantial enough to require broad community discussion, a formal design document, and a historical record of the decision-making process. A regular GitHub issue or pull request is often more appropriate for smaller, more direct changes.

Consider proposing a SEP if your change involves any of the following:

- **A New Feature or Protocol Change**: Any change that adds, modifies, or removes features in the Model Context Protocol. This includes:
  - Adding new API endpoints or methods.
  - Changing the syntax or semantics of existing data structures or messages.
  - Introducing a new standard for interoperability between different MCP-compatible tools.
  - Significant changes to how the specification itself is defined, presented, or validated.
- **A Breaking Change**: Any change that is not backwards-compatible.
- **A Change to Governance or Process**: Any proposal that alters the project's decision-making, contribution guidelines (like this document itself).
- **A Complex or Controversial Topic**: If a change is likely to have multiple valid solutions or generate significant debate, the SEP process provides the necessary framework to explore alternatives, document the rationale, and build community consensus before implementation begins.

## SEP Types

There are three kinds of SEP:

1. **Standards Track** SEP describes a new feature or implementation for the Model Context Protocol. It may also describe an interoperability standard that will be supported outside the core protocol specification.
2. **Informational** SEP describes a Model Context Protocol design issue, or provides general guidelines or information to the MCP community, but does not propose a new feature. Informational SEPs do not necessarily represent an MCP community consensus or recommendation.
3. **Process** SEP describes a process surrounding MCP, or proposes a change to (or an event in) a process. Process SEPs are like Standards Track SEPs but apply to areas other than the MCP protocol itself.

## Submitting a SEP

The SEP process begins with a new idea for the Model Context Protocol. It is highly recommended that a single SEP contain a single key proposal or new idea. Small enhancements or patches often don't need a SEP and can be injected into the MCP development workflow with a pull request to the MCP repo. The more focused the SEP, the more successful it tends to be.

Each SEP must have an **SEP author** -- someone who writes the SEP using the style and format described below, shepherds the discussions in the appropriate forums, and attempts to build community consensus around the idea. The SEP author should first attempt to ascertain whether the idea is SEP-able. Posting to the MCP community forums (Discord, GitHub Discussions) is the best way to go about this.

### SEP Workflow

SEPs should be submitted as a GitHub Issue in the [specification repository](https://github.com/modelcontextprotocol/modelcontextprotocol). The standard SEP workflow is:

1. You, the SEP author, create a [well-formatted](#sep-format) GitHub Issue with the `SEP` and `proposal` tags. The SEP number is the same as the GitHub Issue number, the two can be used interchangeably.
2. Find a Core Maintainer or Maintainer to sponsor your proposal. Core Maintainers and Maintainers will regularly go over the list of open proposals to determine which proposals to sponsor. You can tag relevant maintainers from [the maintainer list](https://github.com/modelcontextprotocol/modelcontextprotocol/blob/main/MAINTAINERS.md) in your proposal.
3. Once a sponsor is found, the GitHub Issue is assigned to the sponsor. The sponsor will add the `draft` tag, ensure the SEP number is in the title, and assign a milestone.
4. The sponsor will informally review the proposal and may request changes based on community feedback. When ready for formal review, the sponsor will add the `in-review` tag.
5. After the `in-review` tag is added, the SEP enters formal review by the Core Maintainers team. The SEP may be accepted, rejected, or returned for revision.
6. If the SEP has not found a sponsor within three months, Core Maintainers may close the SEP as `dormant`.

### SEP Format

Each SEP should have the following parts:

1. **Preamble** -- A short descriptive title, the names and contact info for each author, the current status.
2. **Abstract** -- A short (~200 word) description of the technical issue being addressed.
3. **Motivation** -- The motivation should clearly explain why the existing protocol specification is inadequate to address the problem that the SEP solves. The motivation is critical for SEPs that want to change the Model Context Protocol. SEP submissions without sufficient motivation may be rejected outright.
4. **Specification** -- The technical specification should describe the syntax and semantics of any new protocol feature. The specification should be detailed enough to allow competing, interoperable implementations. A PR with the changes to the specification should be provided.
5. **Rationale** -- The rationale explains why particular design decisions were made. It should describe alternate designs that were considered and related work. The rationale should provide evidence of consensus within the community and discuss important objections or concerns raised during discussion.
6. **Backward Compatibility** -- All SEPs that introduce backward incompatibilities must include a section describing these incompatibilities and their severity. The SEP must explain how the author proposes to deal with these incompatibilities.
7. **Reference Implementation** -- The reference implementation must be completed before any SEP is given status "Final", but it need not be completed before the SEP is accepted. While there is merit to the approach of reaching consensus on the specification and rationale before writing code, the principle of "rough consensus and running code" is still useful when it comes to resolving many discussions of protocol details.
8. **Security Implications** -- If there are security concerns in relation to the SEP, those concerns should be explicitly written out to make sure reviewers of the SEP are aware of them.

### SEP States

SEPs can be one one of the following states

- `proposal`: SEP proposal without a sponsor.
- `draft`: SEP proposal with a sponsor.
- `in-review`: SEP proposal ready for review.
- `accepted`: SEP accepted by Core Maintainers, but still requires final wording and reference implementation.
- `rejected`: SEP rejected by Core Maintainers.
- `withdrawn`: SEP withdrawn.
- `final`: SEP finalized.
- `superseded`: SEP has been replaced by a newer SEP.
- `dormant`: SEP that has not found sponsors and was subsequently closed.

### SEP Review & Resolution

SEPs are reviewed by the MCP Core Maintainers team on a bi-weekly basis.

For a SEP to be accepted it must meet certain minimum criteria:

- A prototype implementation demonstrating the proposal
- Clear benefit to the MCP ecosystem
- Community support and consensus

Once a SEP has been accepted, the reference implementation must be completed. When the reference implementation is complete and incorporated into the main source code repository, the status will be changed to "Final".

A SEP can also be "Rejected" or "Withdrawn". A SEP that is "Withdrawn" may be re-submitted at a later date.

## Reporting SEP Bugs, or Submitting SEP Updates

How you report a bug, or submit a SEP update depends on several factors, such as the maturity of the SEP, the preferences of the SEP author, and the nature of your comments. For SEPs not yet reaching `final` state, it's probably best to send your comments and changes directly to the SEP author. Once SEP is finalized, you may want to submit corrections as a GitHub comment on the issue or pull request to the reference implementation.

## Transferring SEP Ownership

It occasionally becomes necessary to transfer ownership of SEPs to a new SEP author. In general, we'd like to retain the original author as a co-author of the transferred SEP, but that's really up to the original author. A good reason to transfer ownership is because the original author no longer has the time or interest in updating it or following through with the SEP process, or has fallen off the face of the 'net (i.e. is unreachable or not responding to email). A bad reason to transfer ownership is because you don't agree with the direction of the SEP. We try to build consensus around a SEP, but if that's not possible, you can always submit a competing SEP.

## Copyright

This document is placed in the public domain or under the CC0-1.0-Universal license, whichever is more permissive.
